In this lesson we give a brief overview of compression and how to utilise it for maximum gain

In this lesson we give a brief overview of compression and how to utilise it for maximum gain

http://www.what-is-mastering.net/multib ... -overview/Icetickle wrote:Could you write something about multiband compression? You did mention it in the "Compression - Technique, Overview" but It's not enough since it's one of the most important mastering tools. It's not that easy tho.
Thanks man!outbound wrote:http://www.what-is-mastering.net/multib ... -overview/Icetickle wrote:Could you write something about multiband compression? You did mention it in the "Compression - Technique, Overview" but It's not enough since it's one of the most important mastering tools. It's not that easy tho.
Just for you mate
It all dependsIcetickle wrote:Thanks man!outbound wrote:http://www.what-is-mastering.net/multib ... -overview/Icetickle wrote:Could you write something about multiband compression? You did mention it in the "Compression - Technique, Overview" but It's not enough since it's one of the most important mastering tools. It's not that easy tho.
Just for you mate![]()
The thing is, I was struggling with how much should I compress and which band.
Compressing the low end harder and leaving the highs uncompressed seems logical and works great, thanks for that tip.
But it's still unclear to me when and in which band should I adjust the attack time to let the transients go through. Or should I just go trial and error mode with this one?
And should I adjust the gain makeup on each band looking at the maximum gain reduction or the minimum GR (then just bring up the limiter on the end) on the each band?
Thanks again!
Basically trying both you will see what works for your tune.. Yeah, helps!outbound wrote:It all dependsIcetickle wrote:Thanks man!outbound wrote:http://www.what-is-mastering.net/multib ... -overview/Icetickle wrote:Could you write something about multiband compression? You did mention it in the "Compression - Technique, Overview" but It's not enough since it's one of the most important mastering tools. It's not that easy tho.
Just for you mate![]()
The thing is, I was struggling with how much should I compress and which band.
Compressing the low end harder and leaving the highs uncompressed seems logical and works great, thanks for that tip.
But it's still unclear to me when and in which band should I adjust the attack time to let the transients go through. Or should I just go trial and error mode with this one?
And should I adjust the gain makeup on each band looking at the maximum gain reduction or the minimum GR (then just bring up the limiter on the end) on the each band?
Thanks again!
If I'm working on a master and I want the high end to have more transients coming through then I will make sure the high end has a slow attack, if I want the low end to have more transient come through then I will make that one have the slow attack. Maybe both, maybe none.
It's just by listening you have to decide whether the source material will work better with these attack times so at first it will be trial and error but over time you'll refine your technique so you can tell just by listening exactly what needs to be done
Hope that helps?
SunkLo wrote: If ragging on the 'shortcut to the top' mentality makes me a hater then shower me in haterade.
The message of Outbound's latest blog post seemed to be "don't use it if you don't know why you're using it."Icetickle wrote:You should focus less on trying to figure out why should you use it rather than just doing it.
Typically, aside from volume, I hear no difference when I A/B with a compressor.Icetickle wrote:Try putting a multiband compressor on the master, tweak the way you like it and then compare the uncompressed and compressed signal. If it sounds better compressed than use it.
"don't use it if you don't know why you're using it." - you are just testing stuff to learn why would you want to use it.dubunked wrote:The message of Outbound's latest blog post seemed to be "don't use it if you don't know why you're using it."Icetickle wrote:You should focus less on trying to figure out why should you use it rather than just doing it.
Typically, aside from volume, I hear no difference when I A/B with a compressor.Icetickle wrote:Try putting a multiband compressor on the master, tweak the way you like it and then compare the uncompressed and compressed signal. If it sounds better compressed than use it.
SunkLo wrote: If ragging on the 'shortcut to the top' mentality makes me a hater then shower me in haterade.
Glad it helped man! Thinking of it this way was how I 'got' compression.dubunked wrote:Yeah thanks Outbound that was very helpful. I had the feeling the key to me and compression is that I don't spend enough time thinking about and adjusting attack & release times, and apparently "time" in general.![]()
Thanks
first, match the gain so that you can actually hear what's going on; if one version is twice as loud as the other, it's gonna sound better.dubunked wrote: Typically, aside from volume, I hear no difference when I A/B with a compressor.
Good post!Sharmaji wrote:first, match the gain so that you can actually hear what's going on; if one version is twice as loud as the other, it's gonna sound better.dubunked wrote: Typically, aside from volume, I hear no difference when I A/B with a compressor.
compression is my #1 tool for bringing things forward, or pushing things back, in a mix. squash pads or background vocals with an LA2A and they instantly get this creamy smoothness to them, which pushes them back into the mix. alternatively, hit your drum bus with an 1176 in all-buttons-in, slow attack, fast release and they begin to jump out at you.
very very rarely are compressors just gain reduction tools; the way they do it imparts very particular artifacts, which are almost more important-- at least as important--as the actual gain reduction. a FET compressor like the 1176 imparts 2nd order harmonics and makes things brighter and richer. something like the api2500 or the Rocket plugin lets you hipass the compressor circuit, so you can get more gain reduction with less pumping of the low end-- again, great on drum busses and even whole mixes that need more oomph.
the key to learning compression is to experiment with overcompression. Put one on a kick at 10:1, fast attack slow release, with automatic makeup gain (ideally), and play around. bypass it every time you make a change to hear it vs. the original signal.
Something sounding "recorded" and "polished," as well as having really impressive emotional depth, is directly related to good, artistic gain reduction.
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